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Friday, 1 April 2016

The USA’s First Korean War, 1871

The Daewongun, 1869

A recent blog, “The
French Navy in Korea, 1866”, described Korean attempts in the 1860s to
retain its status as “The Hermit Kingdom”, cut off from contacts with the world
outside. The key figure in this was the sinister Yi Ha-ung (1821-1898), the “Daewongun” – a title meaning “Prince of
the Great Court” –who was to be a near-dominant player in internal Korean
politics for four decades until the late 1890s. Adept in playing off internal
and external forces against each other, his main objective was to limit
external contacts and to maintain traditional structures and culture unchanged.
This policy had led to large-scale and savage persecution of Christian converts
and French missionaries and these in turn were to lead to a brief French
punitive mission in 1866, as described in the previous blog. (Click here to read this).

Korea, the "Hermit Kingdom", in the 1860s - exotic and isolated

By the 1860s Western nations were already heavily engaged in
trade with China, and since 1854 with Japan, which had been “opened up” to
foreign merchants from 1854 and was now rapidly modernising. In Korea, however,
the Daewongun, and the conservative
interests allied to him, were not convinced of the merits of such contacts and
were determined to preserve Korea’s isolation. It is against this background that
in August 1866 an American owned vessel, the sidewheel-steamer SS General Sherman, was involved in an
attempt to open trade.

The timing was ill-chosen to say the least, for feeling
against outsiders had been whipped up by the Daewongun and French intervention to avenge the slaughter of
missionaries and converts was imminent. Despite her American registration, the General Sherman’s mission was funded by
a British commercial company, Meadows & Co., which operated in China and
hoped to negotiate trading rights. Only the vessel’s Captain Page and Chief
Mate Wilson were Americans and there were two British citizens on board, the
owner, W. B. Preston, and a Welsh missionary, Robert Jerman Thomas, who had
been brought along as a translator. The crew consisted of thirteen Chinese and
three Malay seamen. Though loaded with a cargo of trade goods – cotton, tin,
and glass – the General Sherman also
carried two 12-inch cannon. The presence of these weapons which was to make the
vessel’s mission doubly unwelcome in Korean eyes.

A view of the Korean coast

In mid-August 1866 the General
Sherman sailed up the Taedong River on Korea's west coast towards
Pyongyang. Initial contact with Korean
officials were peaceful, if not
cordial – permission to trade was refused – and the ship proceeded unhindered
until it ran aground at Yangjak island,
close to Pyongyang. Korean attitudes were now hardening and on August 27th,
when an official boarded the vessel, Captain Page detained him, probably as a
hostage. This worsened the situation and an order arrived from Daewongun that if the prisoner was not
released, and if the General Sherman
did not leave at once, all on board should be killed. Departure was not an
option however – the level in the river had fallen – the ship had only reached
so far upriver due to heavy rains earlier and it was now firmly lodged on a
sandbank.

A North Korean stamp commemorating the destruction of the SS General Sherman

The details of what now followed are uncertain as nobody on
the General Sherman was to survive.
Hostilities erupted on August 31st and cannon were apparently fired
from the ship at Korean troops on the river bank. The confrontation lasted four
days and was brought to a head by fire-ships being drifted downriver towards
the immobile ship. Two attempts failed but the third succeeded in setting the General Sherman ablaze. Chinese and Malay
crew-members either died in the flames, or drowned when they jumped overboard
or were beaten to death when they reached the shore. The captain, mate, owner and
translator appear to have been murdered after capture. The Korean official they
had so unwisely taken hostage survived.

A North Korean depiction of the destruction of the SS General ShermanIt's not clear which of the figures is Kim Il Sung's great-grandfather!

A century later this incident was to attain near-mythic
status under the later Communist Government of North Korea. The dictator Kim Il
Sung claimed that his great-grandfather was involved as an early opponent of US
imperialism. Like so much emanating from North Korea, the claim deserves to be
viewed with some skepticism!

The steam-frigate USS Colorado

The American response was tardy in the extreme. In early
1867 an attempt by a US warship to determine what had happened seems to have got
nowhere due to “foul weather” and a year later contact with the Koreans by the
USS Shenandoah confirmed that all who
had been on board the General Sherman were dead. Decisive action only came in May 1871 when the
US American Minister to China, Frederick
Low,was tasked with gaining an apology. He came in force, backed up by five warships
commanded Rear-Admiral John Rodgers who flew his flag in the steam frigate USS Colorado.

The long-lived USS Monocacy - seen here at Shanghai in 1898

The American flotilla was a
powerful one – besides the Colorado
there were two sloops, Alaska and Benicia, as well as the paddle-gunboat Monocacy, and the screw-gunboat Palos. Between them they mounted 85
guns. The focus was on the Han River, on which the royal capital Seoul lay some
40 miles from the sea – the same approach taken by the French five years
earlier. The warships moored at the river mouth and gunboat USS Palos was sent to assess the possibility
of reaching Seoul. This vessel was fired
on by Korean forts defending the Han and it retired with two men wounded. When the Palos
was again fired upon, on June 1st, the paddle-gunboat Monocacy silenced the battery
responsible. Further negotiation attempts failed in the nine days that followed
and Minister Lowe and Rear-Admiral Rodgers finally authorised punitive action. This
was to involve the capture of Korean defences on Ganghwa Island – a total of
six forts and four coastal batteries.

Officers of the USS Colorado

The landing
went ahead on Jun 10th, preceded by a bombardment by the warships.
The force sent ashore consisted of 542 seamen and 109 marines, together with and
six 12-pounder howitzers. The first fort to be attacked fell without
significant resistance and the American force pressed on to the next, which was
now labelled “Fort Monocacy”. This in turn was to fall and the landing forces spent
the night in it – the first US forces to be stationed on Korean soil.

Hand-to-hand fighting in one of the Korean forts

The
attack resumed the following day, the force offshore bombarding the forts while
the landing party attacked from the land side as the barrage ended. The key to the
Korean defence was a position labelled by the Americans as “Fort McKee” in
honour of the lieutenant, Hugh McKee, who led the assault on it. Resistance by
some 300 Koreans armed with antiquated matchlocks and swords was fierce but
lasted only fifteen minutes – the fact that the Americans were armed with
Remington rolling-block carbines proving a significant advantage. McKee, who was the
first to enter the fort, was fatally wounded but Commander Winfield Scott
Schley – who was to win renown in the victory over the Spanish fleet at
Santiago in 1898 – was close on his heels and he shot the Korean who had killed
him.

Korean prisoners on the Colorado

Captured "Sujagi" - Corporal Brown in middle

By the end of
the day the island and its defences were in American hands. Korean casualties amounted
to 243 dead, a small number of wounded and twenty prisoners. The Americans suffered
three dead and ten wounded. Nine sailors and six marines were later awarded the
Medal of Honor, among them a marine corporal, Charles Brown, who captured a
large Korean standard or “sujagi”. These
were the first Medals of Honor to be won on foreign service.

Then, after the
victory – nothing. The Koreans still refused to negotiate and there was nothing
the Americans could do about it. The first external treaty to be negotiated was
with Japan, and not with a Western nation. It was not until 1882 that the United
States finally signed a treaty with the Koreans,
at a time when the Daewongun was
temporarily side-lined by his equally clever and ruthless daughter-in-law,
Queen Min. (This provides the background to my novel Britannia’s Spartan).

Recently published: Britannia’s Spartan

This latest novel in the Dawlish Chronicles series is set in Korea in 1882 and a sinister role is played in it by the Daewongun.

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About Me

My "Dawlish Chronicles" are set in the late 19th Century and reflect my deep interest in the politics, attitudes and technology of the period. The fifth novel in the series, “Britannia’s Amazon” is now available in both paperback and Kindle formats. It follows the four earlier Dawlish Chronicles, "Britannia's Wolf", "Britannia's Reach”, "Britannia's Shark" and "Britannia's Spartan". Click on the book covers below to learn more or to purchase.
I’ve had an adventurous career in the international energy industry and am proud of having worked in every continent except Antarctica. History is a driving passion in my life and I have travelled widely to visit sites of historical significance, many insights gained in this way being reflected in my writing. I welcome contact on Facebook and via this Blog. My website is www.dawlishchronicles.com and its “Conflict” section has a large number of articles on topics from the mid-18th Century to the early 20th Century.